Liberty Coalition

The Liberty Coalition is a non-profit organization based in Washington, D.C. that connects politically diverse organizations and promotes transpartisan policies related to civil liberties and basic human rights.

The Liberty Coalition is associated with the Liberty and Privacy Network.

History

The Liberty Coalition was founded in 2005 by Michael D. Ostrolenk, J. Bradley Jansen, and James Plummer.

In January 2006, the Coalition received national media attention upon co-sponsoring former Vice President Al Gore's speech, "Restoring the Rule of Law."[1] Former Republican Congressman Bob Barr was scheduled to introduce Al Gore to emphasize the transpartisan nature of the event, however, technical difficulties made Barr's telecast impossible.

Issue areas

The Liberty Coalition has nine working groups which focus on issues they consider to be important. They include:

Partner organizations

The Liberty Coalition has numerous partner organizations that span the political spectrum. They are quick to note that the positions they take "should not be taken as an endorsement by any partner organization unless explicitly stated as such."[2] A few include:

  • American Association for Health Freedom
  • Americans for Tax Reform
  • Bill of Rights Defense Committee
  • Center for Cognitive Liberty and Ethics
  • Criminal Justice Policy Foundation
  • Downsize DC
  • First Amendment Foundation
  • Defending Dissent Foundation
  • Pain Relief Network
  • Townhall.com
gollark: Your knowledge of modern computer things isn't too useful unless you are in a time with microcomputers. You can't make those without large scale integration of semiconductors, which I'm pretty sure you know very little about.
gollark: You need to teach everyone everything, you need to know a lot of earlier stuff you probably *don't* about how your shiny new knowledge of electromagnetism and whatever were derived, and you need to make people actually able to use it, which is really hard.
gollark: You're constrained by manufacturing.
gollark: The future is like now, except Macron was developed.
gollark: I probably know more maths thingsā„¢ than people from around then generally did, but not much of the history or motivation or how they did things without modern calculators and such.

References

  1. "Washington Post transcript". The Washington Post. 2006-01-16. Retrieved 2006-06-29.
  2. "Liberty Coalition partners". Liberty Coalition Web Site. Retrieved 2006-06-29.
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